Results 211 to 220 of about 1,640,389 (263)

Prealbumin proteins in serum

Clinica Chimica Acta, 1971
Abstract The paper presents a modification of the standard Ornstein and Davis method. Normal and pathological sera were analysed by disc electrophoresis on 11% polyacrylamide. This concentration is very convenient for prealbumin separation. The present procedure gives better fractionation of prealbumin than the methods previously reported.
L J, Krzalić, L J, Mihailović
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Serum proteins in leukemia

The American Journal of Medicine, 1954
T HE electrophoretic composition of the serum proteins in patients with Hodgkin’s disease and maiignant lymphoma at different stages of disease was reported in a previous paper.’ Abnormalities such as hypoalbuminemia or increased concentrations of alpha and/or gamma globulin were found in the sera of the great majority of those with active disease ...
R W, RUNDLES, E V, COONRAD, T, ARENDS
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Electrodecantation of Serum Proteins

Hoppe-Seyler´s Zeitschrift für physiologische Chemie, 1975
The sedimentation of albumin under the action of the electric and gravitational fields was determined as a function of time in discontinuous experiments in a rectangular cell, using serum with the albumin fraction stained blue. It was shown that even under the influence of strong electric fields, the upper boundary of the albumin layer fell no further ...
T, Kranz, F, Lappe
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Serum Proteins in the Hedgehog

Acta Physiologica Scandinavica, 1967
AbstractHedgehog serum proteins were studied by physical, chemical and immunological methods. The paper electrophoretic and immunoelectrophoretic patterns did not differ greatly from those of human serum. In paper electrophoresis two beta‐bands were found, the beta2‐band being the most conspicuous. In the immunoelectrophoretic pattern, the form of the “
B, Larsen, O, Tönder
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Serum Proteins in Mongolism

Journal of Mental Science, 1957
In recent years electrophoretic methods for the analysis of the serum proteins have been extensively and fruitfully applied to studies of diseases of the nervous system (Volk, Saifer, Rabiner and Oreskes, 1955; Volk, Saifer, Rabiner and Hinterbuchner, 1956; Press, 1956).
J, STERN, W H, LEWIS
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Nomenclature of Serum Proteins

Nature, 1963
HISTORICALLY, the first names and definitions of serum proteins were based on their solubilities. The classification established by Tiselius consists of five or six zones of electrophoretic mobility.
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Interaction of terbinafine with human serum and serum proteins

Medical Mycology, 1992
The allylamine antimycotic terbinafine acts by inhibition of ergosterol biosynthesis at the level of squalene epoxidase. Using this mechanism in Candida parapsilosis cells, a functional assay was developed to investigate the effects of serum and serum proteins on the antifungal action of terbinafine and related drugs in vitro.
N S, Ryder, I, Frank
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Serum Proteins in Africans

Nature, 1953
IT has frequently been observed1 that the serum globulin-level of apparently normal Africans is higher, and the albumin-level somewhat lower, than that of Europeans. Moreover, workers in this laboratory2 have shown that there is a relation between mean red-cell count and serum protein-levels.
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